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...scoring combination peppered Richter with multiple shots. Captain Nick Johnson, on a three-game scoring streak, and J.T. Wyman, who is 12th in the nation in points per game, challenged Richter with a shot and followed with a quick rebound attempt. The play ended with Richter flat on his back on the ice and the game still scoreless. The Harvard faithful and its band spilled in after the Harvard-Michigan basketball game’s end in good spirits. Raucous Dartmouth fans answered by steadily heckling Richter. “You don’t really realize...

Author: By Elizabeth A. Joyce, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Taylor Saves Day in Gritty Clash with Green | 12/2/2007 | See Source »

...first line of Kita Aquos--a sleek, metallic-silver flat screen with two soft, round bulges at the bottom for speakers, set on a boomerang-footed pedestal--won a shelfful of design awards and a place in European museums like the Pompidou...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sharp's Way of Reshaping Television | 11/29/2007 | See Source »

...design edge--and the company's manufacturing capacity--helped Sharp dominate the $80 billion flat-panel market for years, with more than 16 million Aquos screens sold since 2001. But competitors rushed in, and by 2005, Sharp had fallen behind Sony and Samsung. Consumers have benefited: three out of four TVs sold in the U.S. are now flat panels, and prices for 25-in.-to-29-in. models have dropped 72% in the past three years, according to DisplaySearch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sharp's Way of Reshaping Television | 11/29/2007 | See Source »

That pressure has pitted manufacturers against one another to come up with thinner, lighter, cleaner LCDs. Sharp plans to build a $3.4 billion factory near Osaka to produce bigger screens more efficiently. Yet, Teragawa says, as flat screens grew in popularity, the products became virtually indistinguishable from one another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sharp's Way of Reshaping Television | 11/29/2007 | See Source »

Busy Nalewki Street in Warsaw where the street vendors once hawked bajgels on sticks was empty, smashed flat. For the audiences that used to crowd the little Ruski Teatr in Riga there would be no more after-theatre suppers in the warm and friendly Café Schwarz. Wilno's Niemiecka and Tatarska Streets, once thronged by students of Talmudic learning, were empty. Gaon Street, named for Gaon Rabbi Elijah, the 18th-Century miracle-working rabbi of Wilno, was deserted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: International: The Untellable Story | 11/29/2007 | See Source »

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